The amazon land war in the south of para

被引:64
|
作者
Simmons, Cynthia S.
Walker, Robert T.
Arima, Eugenio Y.
Aldrich, Stephen P.
Caldas, Marcellus M.
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, Dept Geog, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[2] Hobart & William Smith Coll, Dept Environm Studies, Geneva, NY 14456 USA
[3] Kansas State Univ, Dept Geog, Manhattan, KS 66506 USA
[4] Inst Homem & Meio Ambiente Amazonia, Belem, Para, Brazil
基金
美国国家航空航天局; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
agrarian reform; contentious politics; deforestation; direct action land reform (DALR); political ecology;
D O I
10.1111/j.1467-8306.2007.00564.x
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
The South of Para, located in the heart of the Brazilian Amazon, has become notorious for violent land struggle. Although land conflict has a long history in Brazil, and today impacts many parts of the country, violence is most severe and persistent here. The purpose of this article is to examine why. Specifically, we consider how a particular Amazonian place, the so-called South of Para, has come to be known as Brazil's most dangerous badland. We begin by considering the predominant literature, which attributes land conflict to the frontier expansion process with intensified struggle emerging in the face of rising property values and demand for private property associated with capitalist development. From this discussion, we distill a concept of the frontier, based on notions of property rights evolution and locational rents. We then empirically test the persistence of place-based violence in the region, and assess the frontier movement through an analysis of transportation costs. Findings from the analyses indicate that the prevalent theorization of frontier violence in Amazonia does little to explain its persistent and pervasive nature in the South of Para. To fill this gap in understanding, we develop an explanation based on the geographic conception of place, and we use contentious politics theory heuristically to elucidate the ways in which general processes interact with place-specific history to engender a landscape of violence. In so doing, we focus on environmental, cognitive, and relational mechanisms (and implicated structures), and attempt to deploy them in an explanatory framework that allows direct observation of the accumulating layers of the region's tragic history. We end by placing our discussion within a political ecological context, and consider the implications of the Amazon Land War for the environment.
引用
收藏
页码:567 / 592
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Land war
    Seliger, R
    NEW REPUBLIC, 2000, 223 (2-3) : 5 - 5
  • [32] Land use sustainability on the South-Eastern Amazon agricultural frontier: Recent progress and the challenges ahead
    Damien, Arvor
    Isabelle, Tritsch
    Christovam, Barcellos
    Nicolas, Jegou
    Vincent, Dubreuil
    APPLIED GEOGRAPHY, 2017, 80 : 86 - 97
  • [33] Land inequality and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon
    Sant'Anna, Andre Albuquerque
    ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2017, 22 (01) : 1 - 25
  • [34] The land snail fauna of a South American rainforest biodiversity hotspot: the Panguana conservation area in the Peruvian Amazon
    Wendebourg, Birte
    Hausdorf, Bernhard
    JOURNAL OF MOLLUSCAN STUDIES, 2019, 85 : 298 - 305
  • [35] Land occupations and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon
    Brown, David S.
    Brown, J. Christopher
    Brown, Courtenay
    LAND USE POLICY, 2016, 54 : 331 - 338
  • [36] Land use dynamics in the Brazilian Amazon
    Walker, R
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 1996, 18 (01) : 1 - 2
  • [37] Curb land grabbing to save the Amazon
    Armenteras, Dolors
    Negret, Pablo
    Melgarejo, Luis F.
    Lakes, Tobia M.
    Londono, Maria C.
    Garcia, Jaime
    Krueger, Tobias
    Baumann, Matthias
    Davalos, Liliana M.
    NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2019, 3 (11) : 1497 - 1497
  • [38] Curb land grabbing to save the Amazon
    Dolors Armenteras
    Pablo Negret
    Luis F. Melgarejo
    Tobia M. Lakes
    María C. Londoño
    Jaime García
    Tobias Krueger
    Matthias Baumann
    Liliana M. Davalos
    Nature Ecology & Evolution, 2019, 3 : 1497 - 1497
  • [39] Land-Water interactions in the amazon
    Richey, Jeffrey E.
    Ballester, Maria Victoria
    Davidson, Eric A.
    Johnson, Mark S.
    Krusche, Alex V.
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2011, 105 (1-3) : 1 - 5
  • [40] Land use and land cover dynamics in the Brazilian Amazon: An overview
    Walker, R
    Homma, AKO
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 1996, 18 (01) : 67 - 80